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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Vosilla who wrote (159190)6/16/2020 1:20:06 AM
From: TobagoJack2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Pogeu Mahone
Secret_Agent_Man

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218014
 
Re << Also what about China??? Nobody talking about that anymore for some reason.. >>

(1) I think the correct term is China-China-China.

(2) Now that all China-China-China issues are bipartisan-agreed so little to talk about, and actions already underway.

The intended goals agreed along with strategy, namely to cripple China development by isolating China-China-China, shred global supplies chains for everything leading to China.

Cut cut cut ... Engineers, scientists, students, trade, fund, know-how, tourism, IPOs, HK, ... but not anything in Phase I deal package until declared deal-dead, and resuscitate Taiwan. Base rockets all around China. Space Force. Get to Mars. pass laws about the moon. Brain-drain India to Chinese-drain USA.

Cost estimate vague, presumably timing open until victory. Blank-check approach, for China is big.

(3) Allies being collated. Israel told the law. Five-eyes warned. EU polled and pulled. Japan nudged. Africa command boosted.

(4) Is there anything else to talk about? Perhaps speculations?

(4-i) Team America will win or lose - a very short conversation re binary outcomes. The answer shall be known when known.

(4-ii) What else? Boycott NBBJ?

(4-iii) Scoring?

(4-iv) What can China do? What is China doing?

(4-v) What can we do? Besides gold?

(5) China is generally doing ‘strategic composure’ and doing what was doing, build build build, educate, learn, work, save, invest, waste some, but not a lot, and and and

I need the Trump and Republicans and Democrats and neo people to do much harder than already are. I need 0388.HK finance.yahoo.com to be cratered so as to better engage w/ Belt & Road, and Greater Bay

edition.cnn.com

Tencent is building a Monaco-sized 'city of the future' in Shenzhen

Written by Oscar Holland, CNN

Technology giant Tencent has unveiled plans for an almost entirely car-free "city of the future," equivalent in size to Monaco, in the Chinese metropolis of Shenzhen.
Dubbed "Net City," the 2-million-square-meter (22-million-square-foot) urban development will prioritize pedestrians, green spaces and self-driving vehicles, according to its designers.


Although primarily for Tencent's use, many of the spaces and facilities will be accessible to the public. Credit: NBBJ

The ambitious city-within-a-city is set to occupy a stretch of reclaimed land jutting out into the Pearl River estuary. Designed to accommodate a population of some 80,000 people, the site will primarily serve Tencent, the conglomerate behind WeChat and China's popular QQ messaging service.

But as well as providing company residences and offices, the neighborhood is expected to host shops, schools and other public amenities, and will be connected to the rest of Shenzhen via road bridges, ferries and the city's subway system. The American firm behind the master plan, NBBJ, hopes that the new district's entertainment venues, parks and waterside promenade will attract visitors from elsewhere in the city.


The site will be constructed on a stretch of reclaimed land. Credit: NBBJ

As such, the plan differs from the enclosed campuses pioneered by big tech companies in recent years, according to Jonathan Ward, a design partner at NBBJ.

No taller than 500M, no plagiarism: China signals 'new era' for architecture


"It's definitely a destination (and has) a civic component," he said in a phone interview. "It's not meant to be an isolated, secure island -- it's a vibrant city. People will walk through it, they'll connect ... and it will be a vital hub for Shenzhen."

Eliminating the car

With an unusually large vacant plot to work with, NBBJ -- which won an international competition to design the site -- was able to rethink the car's role in urban planning, Ward said.

"Our main goal was to provide a place where innovation can really flourish," he explained. "To do that, we tried to minimize the impact of the car as much as possible.

"Going 'car-free' is still a little bit challenging in our world, so we spent a lot of time designing the city to be as low-impact as possible, removing (cars from) where they don't need to be and focusing on people."


The master plan prioritizes pedestrians, with limited access to conventional vehicles. Credit: NBBJ

Although regular cars will be able to access some parts of the neighborhood, the plan centers around a "green corridor" designed for buses, bikes and autonomous vehicles. The layout eliminates what Ward called "unnecessary" traffic.

"You don't need one block surrounded by roads -- you can maybe have eight blocks surrounded by a road, and take away all the ones in between," he said. "We've been 'subtracting' roads in places where we think it's perfectly fine for people to walk two minutes longer from a subway or a (taxi) drop-off.

"And, in those two minutes, you might see something inspiring, connect to nature or meet a colleague you haven't seen for a while -- all those things you can see happening in a workplace environment can happen in the city."

'Post-weird': How Chinese architecture evolved in the Xi Jinping era


Interconnected planning

As well as integrating with Shenzhen's wider urban fabric, NBBJ's master plan is designed to offer what it calls an "interconnected, human-focused organic ecosystem." For Tencent employees, this may mean eroding the distinction between their work and private lives -- an idea that has become all the more relevant in light of the Covid-19 pandemic, Ward said.

"Traditional cities are very much siloed, even in the densest cities where there's more interaction and intermixing," he added. "But what can happen now is you can start to blur those lines (between work and play), and bring more interaction between different parts of life.

"You're seeing more blurring of those lines, for better or for worse. But I think we can make it for the better as we tune this model going forward," he added.

Elsewhere, the master plan considers environmental sustainability with rooftop solar panels and elaborate systems for capturing and reusing wastewater. Planners also looked at projections for future sea level rises to ensure that buildings are better protected against climate change.


Transport systems will connect the "city-within-a-city" to the rest of Shenzhen. Credit: NBBJ

Tencent isn't the only private company looking to create its own miniature city. Earlier this year, carmaker Toyota unveiled plans for the 175-acre "Woven City" in the foothills of Mount Fuji, where it will test autonomous vehicles, smart technology and robot-assisted living. In Toronto, Sidewalk Labs, a subsidiary Google's parent company Alphabet, was planning to transform a stretch waterfront into a futuristic new neighborhood, before it canceled the project citing "economic uncertainty" caused by Covid-19.
There are also a number of other large-scale developments being planned in Shenzhen, a city that has exploded in size since 1980, when the Chinese government named it a "Special Economic Zone." The first phase of a new business district called Shenzhen Bay Headquarters City, also being built on reclaimed land, is expected to complete by 2022.
Tencent's Net City will take around seven years to complete, with construction expected to commence later this year. The dozens of individual buildings, which will range from one to 30 floors in height, will be designed by variety of different architecture firms.



To: John Vosilla who wrote (159190)6/16/2020 5:08:36 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218014
 
Re China-China-China, in concert w/ what should have been the electioneering strategy 2020 even as China not playing into the electioneering, revisited old subjects but latest update (i guess as late as need to be), and easy-enough to see what China appears to be doing ...

There are other updates on other subjects but below is one sampling that may indicate enough

Unsure what if anything there is to talk about at this particular moment as i am guessing the stories do not end, the details not macro-relevant as the bigger topics of these days, and the overarching vector of cleaver-ing universe and bifurcation of galaxy

You might see something different and what I do not see. Happy to have your read.

nytimes.com
China Reports Progress in Ultra-Secure Satellite Transmission
Researchers enlisted quantum physics to send a “secret key” for encrypting and decrypting messages between two stations 700 miles apart. By William J. Broad June 15, 2020

nytimes.com
A U.S. Secret Weapon in A.I.: Chinese Talent
New research shows scientists educated in China help American firms and schools dominate the cutting-edge field. Now industry leaders worry that worsening political tensions will blunt that edge. By Paul Mozur and Cade Metz June 9, 2020

sciencebusiness.net
US joins global AI group, citing technology threat from China

rcrwireless.com
China to end 2020 with over 600,000 5G base stations: Report
Juan Pedro TomásJune 9, 2020

al-monitor.com
China apparently left out of Israel's 5G network tenderThe first phase of the tender for building the 5G wireless network in Israel has passed its deadline, with Chinese bidders apparently left out.

foreignpolicy.com
U.S. Falters in Bid to Replace Chinese Rare Earths
Despite new legislation, Washington won’t be delivering critical minerals needed for defense, high tech, and energy. Keith JohnsonMay 25, 2020, 7:00 AM

forbes.com
China Is $8 Trillion Away From Eclipsing Trump’s Economy
Steve Forbes06:00am EDT

china-briefing.com
China’s Greater Bay Area: Looking Beyond its Flagship Cities

forbes.com
Samsung And Apple Beaten By Huawei In Huge New Smartphone Surprise
Zak Doffman01:22pm EDT

telecoms.com
US to use financial incentives to muscle Huawei out of Brazil

dailymaverick.co.za
Senior American official says China is using Huawei to export its ‘surveillance state’.

forbes.com
U.S. Efforts To Hurt Huawei Could Drive Up Cost Of Enterprise Tech And Reduce Choice

asiatimes.com
How Huawei can work around US chip banThe chip ban gives the world an enormous incentive to circumvent the US

eurasiareview.com
Rise Of e-RMB: Geopolitics Of China’s Digital Currency – Analysis

chathamhouse.org
China's Focus Remains Firmly Fixed on Domestic Problems15 June 2020